I am a grandmother and recent empty-nester, and it’s given me the time and space to reflect on this gigantic, 20-year, “Life 101″ course I just graduated from.

I read Kahil Gibran’s masterpiece, The Prophet when I was a teenager and remembered the swelling feeling of recognition in my chest reading the chapter on children:

“They come through you, but not from you, And though they are with you, yet they belong not to you. You may give them your love, but not your thoughts. For they have their own thoughts. You may house their bodies, but not their souls, For their souls dwell in the house of tomorrow, which you cannot visit, not even in your dreams. You may strive to be like them, but seek not to make them like you. For life goes not backward, nor tarries with yesterday. You are the bows from which your children as living arrows are sent forth. The archer sees the mark upon the path of the infinite, and he bends you with his might that his arrows may go swift and far.”

When I had my children, I knew they did not belong to me. I tried to parent them accordingly, and I think I succeeded mostly.

Here are my #parentingwins:

1. I was always just honest with my children.
Speaking the truth to anyone takes courage, but with children, it’s a gift that grounds their developing brains in reality. Also, I always had a reason for things and wasn’t just the “heavy with the rules they have to follow” kind of mom. Kids really want and need to know “why.” I was honest with them when I didn’t have extra money for going out or buying things. I shared my emotions with them—I believed that it was better to be sad and to say so, than to pretend I was okay. (Because they would know anyway.) I hoped that maybe they would also just be sad when they were sad, without trying to hide their real emotions.

2. I choose to live in community as much as possible.
Co-housing, community dinners, roommates, housemates, live-in nannies, close neighbors, in-laws in the guest room, and big family holidays over the years all helped me raise kids in a village—and therefore, life lessons came repeatedly from many sources.

3. I let natural and logical consequences be my secret parenting partner.
Right from the beginning, when they were super small, I allowed them to learn from their own choices. Choose not to wear a coat when it’s cold—you learn that being cold at the playground is no fun. Then, next time, you bring your coat. Throw a fit and refuse to eat dinner? Then you go to bed hungry. Now obviously, compassion also teaches; so I was also the mama who had a blanket to share when they were cold and a bowl of soup at bedtime when they were hungry. But I tried to always find balance between compassion and enabling.

4. I believed in fantasy, and I was an excellent shape-shifter.
Playing is more important than work for a child (and a mom)—in fact, kids don’t even understand why mom works. So, I made all our chores a game, and I also decided that we would always focus on what was going right, not what was wrong. When we needed to leave the park, instead of yelling and chasing them, I became the mama duck, quacking for her babies to follow. (Yes, I actually quacked in public.) When the temptation of sugar put at child’s height in the grocery store brought out the whines, I became a mama mouse squeaking for some cheese, and we hopped to the dairy section. Sometimes, we were wild ponies galloping and whinnying our joy on the soccer field. And sometimes, we would have a day as sloths—trying to do everything at sloth speed. Einstein once said, “Imagination is more important than intellect”—and I believe it. I reasoned that they had all of their adult life to work and worry, so for their childhood, we would play.

5. I never put my babies in baby-jail and never let them “cry it out.”
My infants had unrestricted access to me—their first “home.” I tried to meet their needs as soon as they had them, because I believed that I was teaching them to trust the world. Slowly and at their own pace, they transitioned from sleeping on me, to sleeping near me, to in the next bed, to in the next room. Slowly they found their own way confidently in the world. This patient way of introducing the big bad world to my little innocents created a deep well of self-confidence and self-love. I believed that my children’s relationship with me would set the precedent for all future relationships, and I wanted it to be loving, mutually respectful, and honoring of each other’s needs. In other words, I treated them how I would have wanted to be treated right from the beginning.

6. By de-emphasizing the little things, we had fewer fights than our peers.
That old saying “shoveling snow while it’s still snowing” is like cleaning your house while your kids are young,” is true. Day to day, the mess will continue; you can either spend a lot of time clearing sidewalks, or you can just get out and play in the snow! We played a lot!

7. Horses…just horses.
My kids all suffered various stresses, challenges, and bouts of depression navigating adolescence. Horses solved so many of these issues. As a single mother, I didn’t have much money to spare, but I did find ways to make it a daily part of our lives at one point or another. From volunteering at the local “horse therapy group” to just getting the local barn head’s permission to walk down aisles and feed carrots. Where there is a will there is a way. Horse people love to share their knowledge and love of horses, and pre-teens are usually willing workers.

Also, once some skill has been developed, a partial lease is a real possibility. This means going barn to barn until you find some unused or barely used horse and proposition his owner for you to pay half his expenses. This can be as little as 50 dollars a month up to 150 dollars; in exchange, your kiddo gets access to a horse to brush, clean up after, ride, and love three days a week—all without the legal responsibility of ownership! Even though only one of my daughters got totally bitten by the horse-love bug, we all benefited. Horses (and the work they create) is the ultimate in teaching accountability, patience, and a good work ethic.

8. I made a conscious choice not to use violence to teach my children.
I used to hold their little hands in mine when they were being aggressive or hitting their peers or siblings and say earnestly, “These hands are for helping, not hurting.” The one time that I involuntarily slapped my rude, disrespectful, teenage daughter’s face, we talked about it for a month. It took a lot for me to forgive myself for hitting my child.

9. I forgave myself regularly.
I messed up, forgot, lost track of, or downright dropped the ball so many times. I tried and tried and failed again and again. And, I learned how to be gentle with myself—I believed that I was a newborn parent, and then a toddler parent, and then a teenage parent, and I was gentle and forgiving to me and to them.

10. I took breaks.
This parenting gig is so much more full time than any other experience in life. It didn’t used to be, however—we used to parent in a tribe with others helping with the daily chores of life. This nuclear, secular family living in a vacuum is unnatural, and it’s exhausting. I took personal days and played hooky, and I am better for it. I also encouraged my kids to take breaks sometimes—not just sick days, but personal days to stay home and bake cookies, or go horseback riding on the first snow day, or stay under the covers when they were sad.

11. I got divorced (twice).
When it was clear to me that my household was growing up believing that disrespectful or abusive behavior was the norm, I took a stand. My kids saw me modeling self-respect and radical self-care their whole lives. I think they will be better prepared to live a whole, full, and fulfilling life because of this, than if they grew up in a two-parent household.

12. I fed them whole foods at home.
Sure, Halloween candy, chips, and cookies occasionally crossed the threshold too, but almost all the time, my kids only had access to fruits and veggies, traditional fats, and organic meats. Exposure is half the battle with nutrition—they like what they think is normal. Comfort food is simply the food that feels the most like home. For some people, that’s TV dinners; for my kids, it’s homemade chicken broth or pot roast.

13. I took my kids on vacations that had no agendas.
Our lives are scheduled enough—they needed to have days of unscheduled time to let ideas and inventions bubble up. They needed to taste freedom and then take a bath in it. No rules is a good way to live sometimes (it’s also cheaper)!

14. My kid’s rooms were their private space.
I decided early on that I didn’t want to be in a battle with house cleaning or doing it for them; so, the only rule was: keep your stuff in your room. Sometimes, they decorated, organized, and cleaned—and sometimes, you couldn’t see their beds or floors for months at a time. I’m pretty sure that this is how the hamster died. (Again, refer to #3 above.) By allowing them this total sovereignty, they quite literally lived with the consequences of their actions—or lack of action—and developed personal responsibility and accountability all on their own.

15. They had the same chore for six months at a time.
Every family comes up with their own method for teaching participation in house maintenance. My method was to assign each kid a job that was theirs for six months at a time. It allowed there to never be a shirking of responsibility (or blaming it on the person before) and encouraged development of total responsibility—ownership, if you will.

16. I kept switching schools until they found something that was both fun and challenging.
(As well as inspiring and where they felt successful.) If I hadn’t been a working mother, I probably would have home-schooled. But instead, I let them switch and switch, until they found what they loved and thrived in, including letting one and then another go to live with their dad in another state. I encouraged them to be in charge of as much of their own lives as they could handle, because this is the goal right? That they will become so self-sufficient until we are no longer needed at all. With so many parents experiencing the phenomena of “failure to launch,” I wanted to ensure their development was always centered around self-determination.

17. I kept the focus of our lives on how we wanted to feel.
If we can define how we want to feel, then choices become a lot easier. Want to feel successful? Then, get things done. Want to feel joyful? Then, hang around joyful people, and do the things that bring you joy. Want to feel responsible? Be responsible for your own life. This simple exercise will do more to inform their life than anything else—it’s radical and simple.

Okay, I do wish I had done some things differently:

1. Looking back, I really wish I’d had more grace when they decided to move out.
My kids, all at different times, launched sooner than I was ready for them to leave. I wish there was a workshop on how to prepare yourself for the end of daily parenting. I knew all along that raising strong, independent people was the goal—but then, in the end, I wasn’t quite ready to not be needed any more.

2. I wish I had set better boundaries around money.
I never set up an allowance or a schedule for when money was available to them, so consequently, I was always being shamed, blamed, or guilted by my teenagers. Because there was no established limit, they wanted money all the time, and it was a struggle frequently.

3. I limited my kids screen time a lot more than the mainstream, but I still wish I had limited it more.
There was no screen time at all until my youngest was five, but then—partly because of a new husband’s habits—TV, video games, and cell phones moved into their lives. It is the single-most destructive force in America today, if you ask me—and I wish that I had really understood the challenges it would bring.

4. I wish that I had moved overseas with my teenagers.
Teenagers will get into trouble anywhere they are, and their very point of living is to experiment and push boundaries. I really wish that they’d also had a giant dose of non-America in their developing perspective. Time overseas, at any time in anyone’s life, is probably valuable—but for American teenagers prone to entitlement and class-ism, it just might be life changing!

5. I talked about sex and birth control often.
I work in women’s healthcare, but I didn’t encourage decisive action until after my 15-year-old daughter got pregnant. I wish that I had taken my girls for birth control as soon as they hinted at being sexually active, and I wish that little bowl of condoms in the front hall was there for all their teenage years. Of course, my granddaughter is a blessing beyond measure, and we all love her very much. My daughter may feel differently, but I know we would have loved her just as much were she to have arrived five years later. I will always wonder what would have been different for my daughter.

I think that in birth, parenting, and life in general, we finally become experts right when that expertise is no longer needed. It’s said that you “master a subject” after 10,000 hours immersed in study. So, here I am, graduated from parenting with an unnecessary master’s degree. I’ll never parent daily again—well, not in this lifetime—and no, “grandparenting” is not the same. So, what exactly was the point of the last 20 years of my life?

I’ve come to believe that parenting is the most extreme personal growth workshop any of us will ever experience. It’s the most magical and diabolical collection of joy and heartache—a mystical, shamanic journey into the heart of humanity. Welcoming a tiny, helpless human into your heart and home starts an odyssey of epic proportions, weaving through a “candy land” of hormones and histories, morals and ethics, physical, spiritual, mental, and emotional exhaustion. The trials in the TV show “Survivor” have nothing on the experience of surviving parenting. In fact, the challenges little people inflict on their parents, no TV producer could ethically replicate.

Although Kahil Gibran’s essay on children prepared me to let them go, I failed to fully comprehend the last line of the poem.

“Let your bending in the archer’s hand be for gladness; For even as he loves the arrow that flies, so he loves also the bow that is stable.”

To be stable, to be still, to hold space, and be flexible—this is our most precious job. I have been bent mightily—I am a long, slender bow made of willow—and I have been bent nearly in half. I have sent my “arrow children” flying on their own paths of freedom, but when I read and memorized this chapter as a teenager, I didn’t have the foresight to read the chapter on giving—and even if I had, I’m not sure I would have understood its meaning.

”And to the open-handed, the search for one who shall receive is joy greater than giving, And is there aught you would withhold? All you have shall some day be given; Therefore, give now, that the season of giving may be yours and not your inheritors.”

Parenting is giving—giving all of ourselves until we are emptied out, carved, and hallowed. Some stay here craving to be filled again or sadly lamenting their emptiness, but not me—I am glad for it. I feel completely hollow and ready to be filled with the experiences of the second half of my life. Someday, I will be emptied again—but right now, I am happily gathering experiences like seashells on the beach. All the sparkly and stripy ones catch my eye.

All my years of parenting was an exhale of breath. Now, I am inhaling life sharply. The season of giving is over, and it is a celebration not a mourning. Just as each new seasonal shift is welcomed, I feel ready for this winter spiraling into myself and then the spring that will follow.

In the “goddess tradition” there are five life phases: maiden, lover, mother, queen, crone. Using this imagery, I have donned my crown this year. I am happily reigning sovereign over my own life for the first time ever! Were we still living in tribal culture, I would be celebrated and honored for my service.

So, what’s the point of parenting? To raise strong, confident, independent, conscious individuals—and then to take up your crown and rule as queen.

We need more queens in this world—powerful women who have suffered and know battle, but who remember to walk with a strong back and soft open heart. We need love warriors who are experts at giving and holding space, but who have the courage to strike out on their own.

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About Augustine Colebrook

Augustine Colebrook is pretty sure she’ll live past 100 and has devoted this second half of her life to play. She values strength, persistence, and compassion, but is never on time. She delivered babies for the past 20 years, but is currently living like a gypsy. She plans to grow roots in 2018, preferably somewhere with rich soil and space to garden. Connect with her on Instagram.